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Unless they are attributed to someone else, the opinions posted on this blog are Jeff Weintraub's (the blog's creator and sole proprietor, pictured above) and do not necessarily represent the views of his employer, clients, family, friends or anyone else who might even be remotely associated with him, wittingly or unwittingly. In short, don't blame others for Jeff's crazy ideas, which he conjures up on his own.

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IF THERE is any agreement across the ideological spectrum on the subject of immigration policy, it is that our currrent system is broken.

For those with good sense, the solution is a holistic -- and rather complex -- set of provisions addressing the myriad drivers and symptons of the broken system. It's a complicated problem, but many smart and dedicated people have drawn up the contours of policy that could just wrestle it to the ground, if not solve it completely and with the snap of the fingers.

For those who just want to use immigrants as a political punching bag, the solutions are crude and painful, both to immigrants themselves and to the country as a whole. In spite of what they may say, they really don't want sensible and effective immigration reform and for too many years have torpedoed efforts to fix our immigration system (such as a 2007 federal immigration reform bill that, while not perfect, would have left us better off than we are now). Fueled by the extremist talk-radio and TV shouters, this constituency has so terrified our political leaders to do anything to fix the problem, that the prospect of even talking out loud about a fix has been remote at least since the 2007 federal bill went down in flames.

And, ironically, many of the same people who are undermining good-faith attempts at true immigration reform justify their hideous policy solutions by saying that they are acting only because Congress failed to -- as Arizona Governor Jan Brewer did in 2010 when she signed SB 1070, which infamously requires state and local law enforcement officials to question anyone who appears to be an illegal immigrant.That's the same sort of hypocrisy we hear from many of the other proponents of draconia (and ineffective) immigration measures, such as the Alabama law designed to make life for immigrants in the state so miserable they will "self deport." (Yes, "self deportation" is the same policy embraced by Governor Mitt Romney, whose views on immigration policy suggest he, too, has been cowed by the extremists.)

What's truly notable and encouraging about this group is not just what they said but who they are. They represent communities and points of views within the Evangelical community that hardly agree on much else, particularly hot-button issues like abortion or GLBT rights.

On these and other isssues, many of these groups are usually screaming at one another, though they've found common cause in the past on matters such as the aspects of the environment, global human rights and poverty. It might suprise liberals, who disagree strenuously (as I do) with Evangelicals on many issues. But it shouldn't. It's important for everyone to understand that in many areas, the compassion of conservatives isn't much different from the compassion of liberals.

On June 12, these leaders, as part of a coalition called the Evangelical Immigration Table, stepped up and said:

Our national immigration laws have created a moral, economic and political crisis in America. Initiatives to remedy this crisis have led to polarization and name calling in which opponents have misrepresented each other’s positions as open borders and amnesty versus deportations of millions. This false choice has led to an unacceptable political stalemate at the federal level at a tragic human cost.

As evangelical Christian leaders, we call for a bipartisan solution on immigration that: Respects the God-given dignity of every person; Protects the unity of the immediate family; Respects the rule of law; Guarantees secure national borders; Ensures fairness to taxpayer; Establishes a path toward legal status and/or citizenship for those who qualify and who wish to become permanent residents.

We urge our nation’s leaders to work together with the American people to pass immigration reform that embodies these key principles and that will make our nation proud.

As far as I can tell, that's about as specific as they've gotten in their written statements, press conferences and radio advertising. So, sure, the details that derive from those broad principles are subject to many interpretations. But I'm encouraged because these leaders seem to understand the solution has to be multi-facted and comprehensive. Building higher and longer border fences and roughing up a bunch of illegal immigrants -- the old chestnuts of the extremist anti-immigrant camp -- simply aren't going to fix the problem.

I don't usually get too excited when religious leaders issue statements of principle on major policy matters. Not because I don't respect what they're trying to do -- use their moral and communal prestige to help mobilize opinion. That's admirable and important in any society.

But too often these statements are ineffective, either because they're watered down as a result of a need for consensus or, more likely, because they give little if any cover for policy makers to take a courageous stand. The result is that few people, particularly the very policy makers who have the power to make a change, give much attention to these statements. Sadly, nothing happens.

Though I don't think we should hold out collective breath, this could be different, if only because of the presence of so many conservative voices in the Evangelical Immigration Table. They have enormous constituencies and political clout that can, hopefully, neutralize immigration reform opponents, who are almost entirely conservative.

They're also giving the lie to the assumption many have that comprehensive immigration reform is just a liberal dream and a Democratic Party political play for the growing Latino vote. The truth is, there has long been a lot of conservative support for immigration reform. Some pro-immigration reform conservatives represent the interests of businesses that rely heavily on immigrant talent and others who see the issue through a libertarian lens (believing in the unfettered movement of capital, in this case human capital).

Now, if that's the case and they've done little to bring about real reform, what makes me hopeful that this coalition might be different? Well, again, don't let's all hold our breath on this just yet. This is really one of many pieces we need to build a solid constituency for reform. But religious leaders, perhaps more than business and purely ideological leaders, have shown an ability to influence their communities through moral language and the emotional responses it can evoke.

Maybe more importantly, and this will sound crass, many of these communities, understand that their own survival depends on the growing numbers of immigrants (legal and illegal) in their ranks. They have a self interest beyond mere compassion and a desire to fix a broken system. As Lisa Miller wrote in today's Washington Post:

According to a 2007 Pew [Research Center] report, 15 percent of all Hispanics in the United States are Evangelical, and among native-born Hispanics, the number is as high as 30 percent. White Evangelicals, concerned about their institutional future in a country where religious affiliation is declining, see that Hispanics are sitting in their pews, taking communion and worrying about their families’ safety as anti-immigration laws like Arizona’s go into effect. (The Roman Catholic bishops also call for comprehensive immigration reform, but notice that in this case, Catholics and Evangelicals did not work together as they so often do on abortion and other social issues. That’s because competition for Hispanic souls in America is so fierce. “We call it strategic recruitment,” [Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference] said.)"

Maybe I'm encouraged because I'm desperate for good news about immigration policy. Most of what's happened in the name of "immigration reform" over the last few years especially has gone from dreary to depressing -- a lot of beating up on immigrants and avoiding real solutions. In contrast, the Evangelicals statement therefore gives some hope. Maybe only a little, but I'll take that. Let's see what happens.

The substance of SB 1070, the new Arizona law that requires state and local law enforcement officials to question anyone who appears to be an illegal immigrant, is bad enough. But one of the arguments Governor Jan Brewer gave when she signed it into law is also infuriating for its hypocrisy and absence of logic.

Upon signing the bill, Governor Brewer said, "We in Arizona have been more than patient waiting for Washington to act. But decades of federal inaction and misguided policy have created a dangerous and unacceptable situation."

What's really stunning about that statement is it's likely that the vast majority of those promoting such extreme solutions as SB 1070 are the very group of people who have stood in the way of meaningful federal immigration reform.
It's like doing everything possible to block the construction of an important bridge project and then complaining that there's no way to get from one side of a river's bank to the other.

We saw this in the wake of the last big effort in Congress to pass meaningful immigration reform in 2007. A tide of fierce and often ugly criticism, flowing largely from the far right wing of our political spectrum, effectively shut it down. Even though it was not an election year, many members of Congress ran for cover, worrying that supporting the bill could be career ending. Others, from both parties (most notably Ted Kennedy and John McCain, who took the lead on the Senate version of the bill, and George W. Bush, who drew on his waning influence at the time), waded into the roiling waters because they realized it was the right thing to do, that something had to be done.

They compromised greatly to pass what eventually was a watered-down bill but a bigger first step toward progress than we had seen in perhaps two decades. But, in the end, even watered down was too much for many conservatives, particularly the radio talk show shouters, whose demagoguery helped kill it. Doing nothing was better than trying to fix the problem, they argued. (Does this sound like another more recent scenario?)

And then they complained that no one was doing anything to fix the problem. As I wrote here in 2007, only months after the failure of the Congressional reform bill, we saw communities such as Prince William County, Virginia, try to enact draconian laws like the one that just passed in Arizona. Then, as now, we heard people in Prince William County rationalize their support for this provision by blaming Congress for not acting, even though one can reasonably assume they represented the same segment of our population (I can't honestly say the exact same people) who attacked their representatives in Congress for even thinking about passing a comprehensive reform bill.

Now, I agree with Governor Brewer that "federal inaction and misguided policy have created a dangerous and unacceptable situation." And I don't doubt that states like Arizona get a disproportionate number of people illegally entering the U.S. from other countries, mostly Mexico. That's not acceptable.

But it's hard to imagine that a law like SB 1070 will do anything to solve the problem. SB 1070 is no substitute for putting strong border practices into place that make it difficult, if not entirely impossible, to keep people from trying to smuggle themselves into the U.S. That's why I think the Obama Administration, like the Bush Administration before it, is right to beef up border patrols and deploy other technologies to stem the flow.

Also, measures like SB 1070 are no substitute for a more holistic solution, which looks at the reasons -- economic and social -- that people go to such great, and often dangerous, lengths to come to the U.S. illegally or overstay their visas and what what this country should do to deal with the millions who are living here without proper legal status and contributing constructively to their communities. That's what comprehensive immigration reform of the sort we last considered in 2007 and which Congress is about to consider in earnest soon is supposed to do.

SB 1070's call to harass people who "look" like those in this country illegally is just nasty. It only gives an appearance of solving a problem that people like Governor Brewer pretend to be so passionate to solve. It is designed to give perverse satisfaction to those who feel good about going after the uninvited strangers among us and make scared and cynical political leaders look tough for their crusades.

Imagine, if you care to, you are a U.S. citizen or legal residence who lives in Arizona and happens to appear, according to an image hovering in the mind of a law enforcement official, like an illegal. If law enforcement officials carry out the law as written (and, by the way, many police have spoken against laws like this because they forces them into potentially unsavory situations, undermines their effectiveness and makes them responsible for cleaning up a problem that is beyond their control), you could be stopped frequently and forced to prove something you're not.

It may mean that you'll effectively need to have documents on you at all times that show you are a U.S. citizen. In a nation that, for good reason, has a visceral contempt for the notion of a national identification card, how many of us would want to do this? How many of us would want the frequent disruption that comes with being suspected as guilty until proven innocent, or the humiliation of being pulled aside as others pass by and wonder what you've done wrong?

All that is sad enough. What's even more pathetic is that pending legislation that will enact smart, comprehensive immigration reform will probably have a tough time getting passed this year. There is a Democratic majority in both houses of Congress, but they will still need support from Republicans to get the bill passed. Many, even those representing the wing of the Republican Party that believes in sensible immigration reform and sees immigrants as a benefit to the nation (and there are many), are being threatened even more by the restrictionist far right. It's not even clear that John McCain, who took a strong and principled stand as a leader of the 2007 legislation, will be there for it this year. McCain is fighting off a tough challenge from a far-right wing-nut who made his name in Congress (and now as -- what else? -- a radio talk show host) as an immigrant basher.

If this year's push to enact immigration reform does fail -- I hope it doesn't, but I fear it might -- it's hard to predict when our political leadership will acquire the courage to bring up anything like it again in the near future.

But it's easy to foresee how its failure will give its opponents one more reason to say that they "have been more than patient waiting for Washington to act." And thus, using their own tortured, cynical logical, these great American patriots will, once again, with mock exasperation and frequent references to the "will of the People," enact even more dangerous, muscle-flexing laws like SB 1070.

Maybe I'm being unfair to public officials like Governor Brewer. Maybe they will stand up and fight for a real solution, like the pending comprehensive immigration reform bill. But something tells me they'll do everything they can to stop it.

SINCE HE LEFT HIS JOB as CNN anchor a few weeks ago, Lou Dobbs has cast around for something to do with all his new-found free time. He has hinted at running for President of the United States or for U.S. Senate from New Jersey in 2012, against incumbent Robert Menendez. Then, according to a New York Times blog, there were rumors the other day that he has been in talks with CNBC "to conceivably host a prime time program for CNBC. He could also become a commentator for the business news network."

To do any of those, he will likely need to change his image as a fire-breathing anti-immigration zealot, and he has appeared to retreat from some of those positions in recent public statements.

For example, on the Spanish-language Telemundo network last week, he said he was there "to engage in a meaningful and constructive dialogue and work with those who will work toward a real solution, and not simply a continued dialogue. I think we've had an ongoing dialogue in this country for a number of years, two failed efforts at comprehensive reform. I think we need to honestly come together, those who have different views on the issues of illegal immigration and border security and make some real progress toward an understanding and a compromise that will be helpful to those who are in this country illegally."

Asked whether he thinks its fair that many in the Latino community see him as an adversary because of his oft-stated views on immigration and characterization of illegal immigration as the source of many problems in the U.S., Dobbs said no. "[I]t has been the efforts of the far-left to characterize me in their propaganda as such. But my record is clear. I've written three books, best-selling books, that lays [sic] out my views on illegal immigration clearly. I've spoken about illegal immigration for six years. I have said from the outset that I wanted a rational, effective, humane, immigration policy in this country. And I have also said that we have to have control of our borders particularly between the United States and Mexico if we are to be able to control immigration. Without being able to control immigration, there is nothing that can be done."

For many in the pro-immigration community, it will take a lot more for Dobbs to rehabilitate his reputation. There is enough ambiguity in these words to enable him to advocate exactly what he has in the past, and there is so much for him to retreat from. But in the anti-immigrant community, they read his remarks much more clearly, and they sense betrayal, which means Dobbs is a bit betwixt and between right now.

On the Web site DraftLouDobbsforPresident.com, its proprietor, Americans for Legal Immigration PAC, said it "is withdrawing support for Lou Dobbs after years, including the suspension of websites calling on Dobbs to run for President due to the perceived change in Mr. Dobbs's stances on immigration issues.

"While Mr. Dobbs claims his positions have not changed, however, that is not the perception of many of our mutual supporters,' said William Gheen of ALIPAC. 'His recent comments on Telemundo and his national radio show supporting some kind of path to citizenship for illegal immigrants is inconsistent with positions of ALIPAC and the views of most American citizens.'...

"...Dobbs created shock waves last week when news broke about his pro-Amnesty comments on Telemundo that appear to be a departure from his prior support for existing immigration laws. ALIPAC circulated the video of the entire Lou Dobbs interview on Telemundo to over 30,000 national supporters."

Does this mean we'll see DraftTomTancredoforPresident.com sometime soon?

LIKE THE LOVABLE, vain and self-important jester Ted Baxter, anchor of fictional WJM-TV News on the "Mary Tyler Moore Show," former CNN anchor Lou Dobbs has for years used curious logic to entertain and excite countless Americans. Now that Dobbs has left his nightly newscast on CNN, where he chased big ratings by regularly bashing immigrants and misleadingly fanning fears of America's involvement in global trade, it would be a shame to lose track of such an important figure in American public life. Something tells me that he won't let us forget him.

So, with this post, I'm going to attempt an occasional series called "Ted Baxter Watch," which will report on what Dobbs is up to and how he's distorting reality and our national public policy dialogue.

"Well, I’ll tell you this much," he said in an interivew on WTOP, a Washington news/talk radio station, "[running for President is] one of the discussions that we’re having. For the first time, I’m actually listening to some people about politics. I don’t think I’ve got the nature for it. [But] we’ve got to do something in this country, and I think that being in the public arena means you’ve got to be part of the solution."

Who can blame a guy for wanting to be part of the solution, even after he spent years being part of the problem?

In the WTOP interview, Dobbs took on a seemingly statesmanlike tone, offering to reach "out to Latino groups, the Chamber of Commerce, the Business Roundtable, all of the groups with whom I have been in an ongoing debate to try to… bridge some of these conflicts and try to create solutions." Never mind that he will have to undergo a radical personality transplant before such groups, and other fair-minded Americans, will trust him enough to work with him. (He's trying, though. Last week on Telemundo he said he is one of the Latino community's "greatest friends.")

Or as, Stephen Chapman of the Chicago Tribune put it in his blog post today, titled, "Lou Dobbs for president? Ha. Ha. Ha.", "You get famous on cable TV by taking hard-edged positions, creating controversy and fueling anger among both your friends and your enemies. That's not how you get elected to high office, which is why our presidents so rarely satisfy the more extreme factions of their parties."

There have been crazier and more quixotic runs for higher office in American history, and we're seeing another one develop right now in the person of Sarah Palin. But, Dobbs, no doubt, is serious and may have even convinced himself that he's a viable candidate. After his WTOP interviewer laughed at the suggestion that Dobbs would run for President, the former CNN anchor said, "What's so crazy about that? Golly!"

EVEN THOUGH I HAVE NEVER (knowingly) pulled a lever in a voting booth for a Republican candidate, I don't want anyone to think I mean to be partisan when I ask: what the hell does the GOP think it's doing?

I refer to the Republicans' conscious strategy right now to do nothing, in hopes that it will make Democrats look bad and make people like Republicans more -- or some such tortured logic.

Its 'don't-just-do-something, sit-there' approach has been especially apparent for all the months since Congress and the White House have been grappling with health care policy legislation. The sight we've seen of that process has mostly been of Democrats agonizing among themselves, save for one or two moderate Republicans, exceptions who prove the rule.

The strategy, if there is one, seems to be to let the Democrats get their hands dirty and keep Republicans from getting tagged with what will inevitably be a messy process -- and I mean the process leading up to passage of the bill and the implementation after it becomes law (remember all the tumult and confusion around the implementation of the Medicare prescription drug law? This is sure to be as chaotic, but such is profound change.) I have to believe (and, if I took the time, I could probably find polling research to back this up) that Democrats will get credit for trying to do something about what everyone agrees is a broken system, even if the outcome isn't perfect.

Maybe the Congressional Republicans' polling data is beginning to show that they've alienated a lot of potential supporters by coming across as a do-nothing party, because they've finally gotten around to submitting a Republican version of health care reform.

But will this fool anyone? A sneak peek of the Republican bill says it contains a greatest hits of GOP health care provisions (some of which have passed the House but not the Senate in past years) and look like more of a motley patchwork of ideas that may not address the real problems. And won't some people wonder: 1) what took them so long, 2) whether they missed a boat that has long sailed, and 3) if this is any more than a stunt?

Consider also the performance -- or non-performance, really -- of Republicans when the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee met yesterday to mark up that chamber's version of so-called cap-and-trade climate legislation. Except for a brief appearance by Senator George Voinovich of Ohio, Republicans boycotted the proceedings. And all that Voinovich offered was an appeal to subject the provisions of the bill to another EPA analysis that will shed no new light and only delay the deliberations further. Rather than raise their voices rationally against what they clearly see as a flawed bill, they'd rather not show up and try to stall. It's just silly and insulting to the country.

I'll give another example, though, to be fair, this goes back to the previous Congress. I'm talking about the 2007 immigration reform bill, which was done in by Republicans, too. At least in that case, Republicans showed up, though some actually kept a low profile, hoping that by ducking the rage from fervent anti-reformers, it would hit Democrats (and a few courageous Republicans) in the face.

In all three cases, these are issues that every sentient being in the U.S. agrees needs attention. Everyone agrees that our health care system is unsustainable and needs fixing. Most everyone agrees that there is such a thing as climate change and that its effects are already bearing down on us. And everyone, from right to left, agrees that our immigration system doesn't work for anyone and requires an overhaul. Not only is there widespread agreement about all these problems, but that consensus has been with us for a long time.

It's funny that Congress (and other legislative bodies) are so often the last to acknowledge and seriously address some of the big issues like these. They look out of touch and in denial when many businesses, local and state governments and majorities of Americans are already taking steps that Congress would never touch. Businesses, health providers and states have been talking about the need for health reform for years. There's powerful concern around the country about global warming and lots of businesses and individual citizens are taking serious steps to deal with it. So, too, there are many who are more than ready for sensible, comprehensive immigration reform, even if some of the talk radio screamers aren't.

I'm referring also to issues such as affirmative action -- most companies and universities were way ahead of the national political leaders when it came to acknowledging and addressing the need for it -- and gay rights -- many businesses provide the sort of amenities to same-sex-partner employees that makes their lives easier and shuns discrimination, and local and state governments have begun to see that there's no reasonable argument to be made against same-sex marriage.

I'm not saying there are any perfect and elegant solutions, but doing nothing is not an option. And it's hard to have any confidence that you'll get the outcome you want if you're not part of the process that goes into bill making. In the case of immigration (and to some extent health care), the very opponents of reform are the ones who are crying the loudest about how flawed the system is, as I've written before.

And I'm not here to give advice to Republicans how to run their business. But, next thing you know, we'll hear their familiar refrain that the Dems froze them out of the process (which, by the way, Republicans really did when they were in charge of Congress a few years ago and which the Dems have been a great pains not to allow now). That sort of cyncism is not becoming.

Again, this is not partisan. It's about how all our leaders -- Democratic, Republican or Independent -- need to show they they're really there to lead, not just to win the next election.But for now, the Republicans really have a problem with this.

I HAVE TO CONFESS that when The White House announced a few weeks ago that
it intends to pursue a (long overdue) comprehensive reform of our
nation’s immigration policy, I was a bit skeptical. Hadn’t we just gone
through a bruising and ultimately counterproductive exercise to pass an
immigration reform bill a couple of years ago? And aren’t there enough
tough issues on the President’s agenda right, which will tap more than
enough of his energy and political capital?

Don’t get me wrong, I hope President Obama succeeds, that we can fix
what everyone, from one end of the political spectrum to the other,
agrees is a broken national policy (even if they don’t all agree on the
fix). And I hope it happens sooner than later. But, as we saw in 2007,
this is, bar none, one of the most politically explosive issues in our
domestic politics. And the President is working on reversing a major
economic crisis and supposedly pushing through landmark health care
legislation this year (which, much as I would like to see it happen, I
will believe when I see). Will this year be any different?

Ezra Klein, who blogs for The American Prospect,
has his doubts, thinks this is just The White House making it appear
its moving ahead in order to appease the pro-immigration constituencies
that voted for Obama. At least the President gets credit for trying,
even if this is a lost cause. “The New York Times story that’s exciting
folks,” writes Klein, “is based off an interview with Celia Munoz
[The White House Director of Intergovernmental Affairs and one of the
most gifted immigration policy analysts in the land] that sounds like
the equivalent of ‘he’ll form a commission.’ She says that ‘over the
summer [Obama] will convene working groups, including lawmakers from
both parties and a range of immigration groups, to begin discussing
possible legislation for as early as this fall.’ Elsewhere she says
that he intends to ’start the debate’ this year. A betting man, I
think, would not lay down $50 on Congress seriously considering
immigration legislation this fall.”

Indeed, as that Times article reports, “Mr. Obama plans to speak
publicly about the issue in May, administration officials said, and
over the summer he will convene working groups, including lawmakers
from both parties and a range of immigration groups, to begin
discussing possible legislation for as early as this fall.”

In The Politico,
a roundtable of experts has mixed opinions about whether the time is
now. Martin Frost, for example, a former Democratic congressman,
generally a cheerleader for immigration reform, makes it sound very
dim: “No year is ever a good year to seek immigration reform.
Immigration reform makes Social Security reform look like a walk in the
park. The Obama administration should concentrate on health care and
energy legislation this year and not waste capital on this most
difficult of all subjects.”

In the same Politico forum, though, Cesar Conda, a Republican
strategist, says, it depends: “President Obama can get something done
on immigration reform by avoiding President Bush’s mistake of allowing
the debate to focus on amnesty for the current undocumented population.
Obama should instead focus on creating new legal avenues for foreign
workers to enter the U.S… If President Obama chooses to focus on legal
immigration reforms and not amnesty, I believe he could get Republican
support and get something constructive done on immigration this year.”

Frank Sharry, Executive Director of the pro-immigration group America’s Voice
and, along with Munoz, one of the other leading experts on the subject,
argues that now is the time for immigration reform. “We all know the
public voted for change,” Sharry writes.
” Two-thirds of voters approve of the aggressive approach being taken
by the Obama White House to the myriad of reform challenges facing the
country. In addition, the majority of Americans agree that earned
citizenship, combined with smart policies that significantly reduce
illegal immigration, is the American way to solve this complex
challenge. They understand that our immigration system is broken, and
overwhelmingly support practical efforts to fix it.”

Alex Aleinikoff, who is yet another of the great minds on
immigration policy in the U.S. and the Dean of the Georgetown
University Law Center, wrote in today’s Washington Post
that there’s a “strong case for starting this conversation now” about
passing a meaningful new reform package. He argues that the system we
have today to deal with immigration policy management would not be able
to handle the applications for legalizing undocumented immigrants, and
we would need a lot of lead time to put other pieces in place. But
that’s why, he says, we should start working out the legislation sooner
rather than later. Knowing it will take a while to get it passed, we
might be in a better position to handle the major change.

“The substantial lead time needed for creating a credible
verification system and an effective legalization program provides
another argument for beginning the conversation on comprehensive
immigration legislation soon,” Aleinikoff writes. “And by the time
these new programs would come into force, improvement in the economy
would probably make legalization efforts less controversial.”

It also strikes me that Obama and The White House know that they have the political momentum now.
Will it be enough to overcome the inevitable opposition? Let’s try it
and see. I would like to test Sharry’s assertion that the nation voted
for change and that incoherent, counterproductive immigration policy is
one of the things they would like to see changed. Besides, The White
House can’t know how much political capital it will have in the bank a
year from now (when we are heading into a mid-term election, a time
when Congress hides from ticklish issues), let alone two years from now.

I also have to believe that this White House will do a better job of
selling the virtues of a comprehensive immigration reform than the last
did. Make no mistake, George W. Bush supported the last bill; I give
him credit for this much. But he and his team did a rather poor job of
explaining why it was necessary. And, having burned through most of its
clout with Congressional Republicans by then and with an historically
low favorability rating, Bush’s White House had no way to keep allies
from going AWOL on the issue when they began to feel under siege.

That’s why, assuming there are enough hours in the day for The White
House to hammer out this difficult new reform alongside all its other
priorities, I say, why not? Yes, there will be those from the right —
led by the intellectually dishonest shouters like Limbaugh, Beck and
Dobbs — who will start throwing knives, and they will, in turn, ignite
once again a pretty fierce and motivated — but, I’m convinced, small —
segment of our population to storm the barricades. But the conditions
will never be perfect, and if ever there is a time to push this
through, it makes sense to start sooner than later. If not now, when?

But, even if it had been stripped of such stellar atmospherics, the act of becoming a U.S. citizen is still as inspiring as it comes. You can sing "The Star-Spangled Banner" at the top of your voice, release a flock of bald eagles and wrap yourself in the American flag, but that still won't match the patriotic spirit of a naturalization ceremony.

That's because you can't help but be impressed with people who have taken an affirmative step to embrace America as their own. They're not taking it for granted, as too many of us native-born Americans do (not everyone of us, thank goodness). Many of them quite likely given up a lot to come to this country, and worked pretty hard to earn the right to raise their hands and take the Oath of Allegiance for Naturalized Citizens.

More than 200 new Americans representing 56 different nations of origin did just that at the Lincoln Memorial yesterday. That's in addition to a record number who naturalized in 2008 -- more than a million -- up from 660,000 in 2007 and just more than 700,000 in 2006, according to the Department of Homeland Security. If ever we need an affirmation that America has something powerful to offer -- that much of the rest of the world still has strong confidence in this nation's future, even if we might not at times -- this is it.

This was not the first naturalization ceremony I've seen. I've been to two or three others, one of which, I'm proud to say, I organized in a Senate Office Building. Senator Ted Kennedy spoke wistfully and movingly about his immigrant forebears at the event, almost as if no one had ever heard of his family before. And many native-born Americans watching on wept with pride for the hundreds who took the oath that day and for their country's good sense to embrace them as one of us.

That's what's so inspiring -- so truly patriotic -- about these affairs. You're watching America being remade and refreshed, as it has been over and over again since its beginning. It's cliche to say it, but that's what America is built on: its ability to take in people from all over the world and reinvent them as they reinvent America.

That fundamental truism of American life is somehow lost on the anti-immigrant pinheads who preach, as Rush Limbaugh put it recently, that immigrants will "destroy the U.S. culture." No, Rush, it's just the opposite, and those like you, who try to stand in the way of that process are not the patriots you presume to be. Apparently, they couldn't stop almost 2.5 million from becoming Americans over the last couple of years alone.

If you've never been to a naturalization ceremony, or you can't get enough of them, seek one out. Bring your kids, your students, your church, your Cub Scouts or Brownies. Offer to host an event in your area (the other ceremony I went to took place at halftime of an NBA game). Rarely will you feel so proud to be an American.

FOR THE NEW YEARS DAY HOLIDAY, my family and I went to New York City. We saw a Broadway musical, went to some museums, looked at Christmas windows, ate a lot, and waded through huge crowds. It was a fun time for all of us. On top of that, the visit gave some shape to the reasons I'm feeling optimistic about the year ahead.

I'm not saying that 2009 will be pain-free or prosperous, though I hope that's the case for all of us. Far more careful and knowledgeable analysts than I are suggesting that the economy might get worse before it gets better. What do I know?

But I don't feel, as some might, that this nation has fallen off a cliff and is headed for a loud, terrible splat at the bottom of the valley and that it will take us years to recover. We're probably headed for a tough year; I'm bracing myself for that. But I think we'll bounce back sooner than later. Here's some of the highly unscientific evidence I saw in New York that gave me such (cautious) optimism.

Foreigners everywhere. Everyone in my family remarked that nearly everywhere we went we heard foreign languages or foreign accents -- almost more than we heard American English. In fact, it became a sort of game to us to be able to get close enough to hear, over the din of a crowd, whether we were hearing French, British or Australian English, Russian, German, Spanish, Italian or Arabic. Sure, there are a lot of people living in New York who speak other languages, but I'm talking about people who were clearly tourists and, by the way, spending money.

What's that mean? Well, it reminded me that America is still attractive to many others around the world, though, according to the Travel Industry Association, the U.S. share of international travel has dropped by 35 percent over the last 13 years as the world market for tourism grew by 61 percent. Yes, we're losing some ground there, and we need to do something about that. But American is still a magnet to many and likely to remain so, even after the dollar strengthens against other currencies. I don't mean tourism only but other quality goods and services America offers.

It also reminded me that we're very much part of the world, and, once this global economic malaise subsides, that will also be a source of even greater opportunity for us than it has been in the past -- economically and culturally.

That will take some effort on our part. More Americans need to learn to be a little less insular and more open to engaging with the rest of the world. But I think we've been headed in that direction for at least a generation, and the next generation will be even more so. And our success as a nation will depend upon our ability to find and serve new and growing markets around the globe and to tap the best minds we can find wherever we can find them.

Immigrants everywhere. During one of the many taxi rides we took during our three days in New York, I struck up a conversation with a Pakistani cabbie, who eventually got around to speaking with pride about his three children -- two in graduate professional schools and one in college. All of them sound likely on their way to prosperity and to making great contributions to their community and country.

Okay, it's anecdotal, and so are the dozens of identical stories I've heard from other proud immigrant cabdrivers (I talk to a lot of them) who've come to this country to work hard and support kids who will go on to be model Americans. Through immigration, this country continually draws and develops new talent and staves off the the sort of demographic implosion that many other developed nations with little immigration (such as many E.U. countries and Japan) have faced as their populations age and shrink. (Though, as you've heard this rant from me in the past, if we don't fix our immigration laws, we'll be squandering this advantage.) Moreover, people from other countries are still fighting to get into America. Given the choices, they're bullish about the promise of America, why shouldn't I be?

Innovation. New York reminds you of how much this country innovates, especially in areas such as fashion, art, music, books, theater. Sure, it has some of the technical innovation we usually associate with, say, Silicon Valley or areas like the the Washington, D.C., Metro area, which houses a lot of biotech companies. And it's all there, in New York, bright and shiny.

Our success as a nation has long been due to innovation, even as we have lost our edge in manufacturing and agriculture to many other parts of the world over the last generation or two. We invent things, improve upon them, figure out better ways to make and distribute them. We Americans, who tire quickly of the latest new thing, are more likely than most to demand and quickly adopt the newest and most cutting edge stuff. That kind of environment is nurturing of new innovations. If anything, the rest of the world is trying to catch up to us in that department, as this article in the Economist argues.

True, there are many signs that we could lose our lead on innovation, and there are many who have called for increased investment in cultivating our talents in the sciences and engineering. But our innovation infrastructure, while quite possibly hampered by the current recession, won't be vanquished by it. It's a very solid base to soften our fall.

Global connectivity. Immigration. Innovation. Those are at least three reasons why I feel we'll get through this rough patch. We need to do more to enable us to take full advantage of these assets. But we're in as good a position as any country to build on them and to thrive once again.

AS I HAVE NOTED ON SEVERAL OCCASIONS (see this and this), there was little good news in 2007 for those who worked or hoped for a comprehensive fix to our broken immigration system. The tide of public opinion scared members of Congress from doing what they had to do to legalize the status of workers already in the U.S., reunite families and enable enforcement of immigration laws. And some shrill voices at both the national and local levels pressed for some highly punitive measures that made restrictionists feel good, scared a lot of immigrants (legal and undocumented) and did nothing to solve the heart of the problem.

These voices seemed to have gotten some momentum, leaving many to wonder when the pendulum would swing sufficiently back to a point that people from both sides of the partisan divide in Congress could get out from under their desks and enact the sensible legislation, like the bill that died in the Senate in late June 2007 (hopefully with some improvements).

With all that is going in the world and in this country, it seems that immigration reform may not be at the head of the line for passage in 2009. But maybe it has a better chance than one might guess at first thought.

A Washington Post editorial today pointed out that "illegal immigration does not seem to be the effective wedge issue in Virginia that some politicians once hoped it would be. One percent of likely voters rated immigration the most important issue in Virginia, according to a Washington Post poll taken before this year's election; the share was nine times larger last year. Rep. Virgil H. Goode Jr. (R), notoriously hostile to illegal immigrants, lost to Democrat Tom Perriello in an upset in Virginia's 5th District, which stretches from Danville to Charlottesville."

Similarly, earlier this month, an immigrant advocacy group, America's Voice, reported "nearly 8 in 10 (78 percent) voters consider illegal immigration to be a serious issue, and overwhelmingly, they favor a comprehensive approach to immigration reform. By more than 2 to 1 (57 percent to 28 percent), voters prefer enacting comprehensive immigration reform to an enforcement only approach. While the economy is the top issue on the minds of voters, more than 6 in 10 (62 percent) believe we would be better off if people who are in the United States illegally became legal taxpayers than leave the country because they are taking away American jobs (21 percent)." [My emphasis. By supporting "comprehensive" reform, these survey respondents are presumably rejecting an overly punitive, enforcement-only approach to immigration.]

"Through public opinion research and analysis of the races, AV found that Americans in the so-called 'battleground' districts and states are tired of slogans and polarization that do nothing to solve our nation’s problems, and are rejecting candidates who espouse them. Voters in overwhelming numbers support candidates that call for a smart, fair, and practical approach to immigration reform, one that will bring the system under control by registering undocumented workers so they can get on the tax rolls and a path to citizenship; ensuring stronger enforcement against employers who exploit workers; and allowing a limited number of immigrants whose work is needed longterm to come to the U.S. legally rather than illegally."

That's great news. It may not be enough to say it's time to dust off the 2007 bill and push it through as soon as possible; it's hard to know at this point if the votes in Congress are there for that just yet.

But it suggests that our political leaders might be able at the very least to talk aloud thoughtfully about immigration reform without fear of being shouted down by their constituents or by rabid radio talk show ranters. Though I doubt the anti-immigrant ranting will stop, it's good to know that it might have less widespread support than our politicians thought.

Maybe -- though perhaps I should be more ambitious than this -- we can spend 2009 helping the public understand that 1) we cannot wait to fix this terribly dysfunctional system and 2) immigrants -- legal or otherwise -- are not the source of our problems. Indeed, as a group they are an asset to the United States. Maybe, just maybe, there's an opening here.

I THINK IT'S ONLY RIGHT THAT, after pointing out on Thursday morning how hot topics such as immigration reform and same-sex marriage scarcely came up in any of the speeches from the Democratic Convention podium, Barack Obama himself waded into them somewhat on Thursday night. He said:

I know there are differences on same-sex marriage, but surely we can agree that our gay and lesbian brothers and sisters deserve to visit the person they love in the hospital and to live lives free of discrimination. Passions fly on immigration, but I don't know anyone who benefits when a mother is separated from her infant child or an employer undercuts American wages by hiring illegal workers. This too is part of America's promise - the promise of a democracy where we can find the strength and grace to bridge divides and unite in common effort.

Okay, it's only a few sentences. But considering how sensitive these issues are and that he only devoted a few sentence to each of a wide range of policy matters, I think this signals something important. Obama handled himself well on these issues, hinting where he stands (no surprise) without flaunting that position in a way that will antagonize people unnecessarily. He may not win votes on this but he gets points for trying to hear where they're coming from.

In the very same paragraph, he brought up a couple of other passionate issues:

We may not agree on abortion, but surely we can agree on reducing the number of unwanted pregnancies in this country. The reality of gun ownership may be different for hunters in rural Ohio than for those plagued by gang-violence in Cleveland, but don't tell me we can't uphold the Second Amendment while keeping AK-47s out of the hands of criminals.

This is absolutely the right tone. It's what we need to deal with issues about which people disagree profoundly. That's in contrast to what many in the past -- and, for the most part, I mean Republicans -- who have used these to inflame passions more than cool them and to frame issues in a way that have only divided America.

Speaking, as I did last post, about U.S. immigration policy, my wife pointed out to me this morning how little it has come up in the public exhortations at the Democratic National Convention this week. So, too, same-sex marriage, which was a huge point of contention in the last Presidential election cycle, mostly because the Republicans did everything they could to make it so.

To be fair, it's not as if there were no references to immigration in the official, public part of the convention (that which we in TV Land can see). But they were few and brief.

In a speech in the not-so-prime-time moment of 4:45 p.m. ( guess that would be 6:45 p.m. Eastern and 3:45 p.m. Pacific) on Monday, August 25, Patricia Madrid, Co-Chair, of the Democratic Party Platform Committee and former former Attorney General of New Mexico, devoted all of one paragraph to the subject, saying, "Our immigration system is broken. We need comprehensive immigration reform, not just piecemeal local efforts, and that’s the change Barack Obama and Democratic leadership will provide."

At a higher profile moment during last night's proceedings, Senator John Kerry, touched on the issue fleetingly and not-to-squarely when he said, "Candidate McCain says he would now vote against the immigration bill that Senator McCain wrote. Are you kidding? Talk about being for it before you’re against it."

Arizona Governor, Janet Napolitano, whose bio on the convention Web
site says she "leads the nation in addressing illegal immigration, and
was the first governor to call for the National Guard at the border at
federal expense," didn't even mention the word immigration in her
convention speech.

But, under the heading of "Renewing the American Community," the Democratic National Committee's Platform Committee Report admirably devotes roughly a page (out of 94 pages) to the subject, saying: "....[O]ur current immigration system has been broken for far too long. We need comprehensive immigration reform, not just piecemeal efforts. We must work together to pass immigration reform in a way that unites this country, not in a way that divides us by playing on our worst instincts and fears. We are committed to pursuing tough, practical, and humane immigration reform in the first year of the next administration." But don't expect any reading of the full platform report on the floor of the convention. You really have to look hard for this.

As for same-sex marriage, suffice it to say that it doesn't even show up when you type the words "same-sex" into the convention Web site's search engine.

This is more of a lament than a complaint, mind you. Sad to say, I think the Democrats were smart to keep the issue out of the convention limelight. The goal now is to win and deal with this issue after the election, as they inevitably must. They know as well as the Republicans do that there is a huge well of anger in America against immigration and, to some extent in some quarters, immigrants. Some politicians have devoted their careers to fanning the anti-immigration/immigrant flames, and "journalists" like Lou Dobbs and radio talk show shouters have boosted their ratings by constantly misinforming their audiences and egging on their rage.

Or, if you want to play nasty, you can seize the issue to tap some strong sentiments in the American electorate and to pillory anyone who is nominally pro-immigration (and the restrictionists will define that very broadly).

It will be interesting to see if the Republicans can resist that temptation, as at least one segment of the party is prone to do. If they do, they are playing with fire. They risk not only fomenting a nasty upsurge of anti-immigrant fervor but also making McCain and other Republicans who favored immigration reform (including George W. Bush, by the way) look bad. My bet is that in the name of party of unity, they will do as the Democrats have done at this week's convention -- at least on immigration.

Now, same-sex marriage is another story. What will the Republicans do this time?

IN HIS COLUMN IN NEW YORK TIMES TODAY, Tom Friedman points out that the U.S. Olympic team, which is leading the field at this writing in total medals won, is made up of 33 foreign-born athletes. He quotes Robert Hormats of Goldman Sachs as pointing out how ironic this is "at the same time you have a rising call in America to restrict immigration."

Neither Hormats, Friedman nor I are the first to point to this irony,. But it is rich and instructive, nonetheless and got me wondering how the immigration restrictionists have to say about it. They might undermine their populist posture by pouring water on one of America's sacred institutions: sports.

An Associated Press story on the subject quotes Ira Mehlman, of the Federation of American Immigration Reform, the leading anti-immigration group in the U.S., as saying that "foreign-born Olympians merit public support — but should be viewed as exceptions in a system fraught with flaws and unfairness. 'Not everybody coming into the U.S. is an Olympic athlete or a Nobel prize winner,' Mehlman said. 'Maybe this ought to be a wake-up call that we ought to design an immigration policy that seeks out exceptional people. Now, most of it is based on extended families. ... you don't have a policy designed to bring in people who fit the needs of this country.'"

In the same article, William Gheen of Americans for Legal Immigration said, "The American public is starting to sour on all immigration in reaction to rampant illegal immigration. The danger is if people say, 'Look at these immigrants who are in the Olympics — therefore you should provide a path to citizenship for all the illegal immigrants in the country."'

Those are some remarkable spins on an issue that these two men would probably just as soon not have to discuss too often: immigration is okay as long as we get the 'good' immigrants, and the success of foreign-born U.S. Olympic athletes is a slippery slope -- Americans might actually believe that immigration is a good thing!

This whole irony and Mehlman's response remind me of a scene in the movie "Do the Right Thing" when Mookie, played by Spike Lee, is arguing with Pino, played by John Turturro, an overtly -- almost proudly -- racist white guy who helps run the pizza parlor where Mookie works:

So, if I understand Mehlman's response to the fact that there are 33 foreign-born members of the U.S. Olympic team, he's saying the same thing: they're different from the rest of the people he trashes categorically. They contribute to the commonweal and inspire the American people.

The problem with this is twofold. First, so much of the anti-immigration community's rhetoric leaves the impression that most, if not all, immigrants are criminal, competitive with native-born Americans in the workplace, unwilling to assimilate into the "American Way," lazy -- the whole litany. So it's hard for any immigrant to get the feeling that, like foreign-born members of the U.S. Olympic teams, they're welcome here. Just as Magic Johnson, Eddie Murphy and Prince would strain to find comfort in Pino's pizza parlor.

Second, how are we to know who are the "good" immigrants, and who should be the judge of that? How are we to know that a poor immigrant who is currently enrolled in a state university in the U.S. will not someday go on to be a great scientist, civic leader, artist or philanthropist -- has been the case with so many immigrants, who came with "only the clothes on their backs" and 35 cents in their pockets.

And if letting in the "good" immigrants is okay with Mehlman and his ilk, why do they do ferociously oppose expanding the number of H1-B visas the U.S. gives out to highly skilled workers, those who will presumably help U.S. industry remain competitive around the world with new innovations?

As for Gheen, who fears that the success of foreign-born U.S. athletes will make the case for legalizing undocumented immigrants, his argument is a red herring. Except perhaps for one athlete, who I think (I'm not clear on this) came to the U.S. illegally with his parents when he was four years old and later became a U.S. citizen, as far as I can tell, most of these athletes came to the U.S. through legal immigration channels. Here is an example of how the restrictionists play the game of making it seem like all immigrants are illegal, if not by technical designation, then by perception.

And what would be so bad if we did find a way to make more of the supposedly millions of undocumented immigrants legal -- particularly those who are already contributing positively to American society? How long can we afford a system that leaves them and their employers in limbo and pretend that we don't need them in many sectors of our economy and cultural life? How long can the restrictionists continue to rail that the system is broken (which everyone agrees) and then do everything possible to block practical ways of fixing it?

The fact is, as Friedman implies, if you look into the family history of any of the athletes representing us so well in Beijing (and, by the way, of many of the restrictionists like Mehlman and Gheen), you will likely find an immigrant who came to this shores a generation or more ago. At that time, no one could have predicted that he or she would be the ancestor of a U.S. Olympic athlete, who is now making the rest of of feel so proud.

APPARENTLY, I MISSED THE BIG NEWS, when it came out nearly a month ago that CNN anchor Lou Dobbs
had waved off suggestions that he might run for President. That's right, of the United States.

"I'm an advocacy journalist," Dobbs told the Detroit Free Press. "I cannot imagine being a candidate for any office and certainly not president. I would be the candidate of last resort."

Any real, self-effacing "journalist" would have merely laughed at the question. But Dobbs had to give some justification as to why he wouldn't run. "I'm an advocacy journalist!"

(Well, at least Dobbs is honest about one thing: there's nothing objective or dispassionate about his rants on CNN prime business show. It's advocacy! Now it can be told! One has to wonder how the Cable NEWS Network can continue to justify what Dobbs does as news. What it must certainly be is a ratings grabber, which is the only reason I can think CNN would continue to leave him on the air, particularly in such a prominent time slot.)

But the Free Press interview was then. This is now. Like a latter-day Ted Baxter, so giddy that anyone would even suggest he run for President, Dobbs recently told the Wall Street Journal, "I cannot say never."

Reminds me a bit of the time many years ago when Arnold Schwarzenegger, appearing on the David Letterman Show, said with a straight face, "I am the best thing that ever happened to the Kennedy family." Like Dobbs's statement to the Journal, that line got a huge laugh. But the difference is that Schwarzenegger was joking -- spoofing himself, really.

Dobbs's sense of self-importance also rose its ugly head when he told the Free Press last month: "These two parties are great about discussing wedge issues like gun control, or abortion or gay marriage but have little to offer in dealing with issues and challenges that matter to most people like free trade or illegal immigration."

I'm not sure that free trade or illegal immigration are issues that matter most to most Americans, though they're important. There's no doubt, however, that Dobbs has done a brilliant job of whipping a committed core of Americans who do care about these issues into a frenzy. Many people give him a lot of credit -- along with many of the other disingenuous talk show shouters -- for derailing the comprehensive federal immigration reform bill that was up for consideration on Capitol Hill last year.

And, because the federal government is now doing nothing to address a policy matter that should have been fixed a long time ago, Dobbs and his posse are beating up on the feds and Congress for, what else, doing nothing. If this problem of immigration policy ever got fixed, what would Dobbs have to talk about? Oh, of course, the evils of outsourcing.

What he probably won't acknowledge is that most of those Americans who care about the immigration problem don't really agree with where him and other restrictionists on some core points. As the Pew Research Center found in a survey last June, while many Americans were ambivalent about whether the immigration reform bill was a good one (regardless of political affiliation, only about a third favored it and large percentages -- about one quarter to one third, depending upon affiliation -- were undecided), most favored "a way for people who are in this country illegally to gain legal citizenship under certain conditions," according to the Pew Research Center's findings.

"Overall, 63 percent of the public -- and nearly identical numbers of Republicans, Democrats and independents -- favor such an approach if illegal immigrants 'pass background checks, pay fines and have jobs,'" the Pew Research Center concluded.

What's more, according to the survey, "In general, the public is less supportive of providing 'amnesty' for illegal immigrants than it is of providing a way for illegal immigrants to gain citizenship. Even so, a majority of Americans (54 percent) say they favor amnesty for illegal immigrants already in the country if they pass background checks and meet other conditions."

If that's the case, then why are the presidential candidates -- especially the Republicans -- contorting themselves to avoid saying anything about immigration, let alone utter the word "amnesty?" Maybe they're worried that Dobbs if takes himself so seriously, he'll actually run for President.

ONE OF THE MOST MEMORABLE MOMENTS IN THE MOVIE "BROADWAY DANNY ROSE," Woody Allen's 1984 comedy (and, for my money, Allen's funniest) about a two-bit talent agent, comes when the title character stumbles upon a pissing match between two alleged mobsters at a a backyard barbecue somewhere in New Jersey.

In front of a small gathering of fellow partygoers, the two wise guys are trying to outdo each other by saying that "money ain't so important to me." And to prove how little they care about money, they rip up hundred dollar bills in front of everyone, each time tearing up more and more bills from huge wads. One wonders just how far they will go, who will stop first. From the pained looks on their faces, they to appear to be hoping that someone will tackle them and put an end to the nonsense. But Danny Rose leaves the the scene before we see who blinks first or how this will turn out.

The latest spat between Repubulican Presidential candidates Mitt Romney and Rudolph Giuliani over who sounds tougher on illegal immigrants reminds me of this money ripping scene. Again, one wonders just how far they can take it, how much they can posture, how bad ass they can sound. Who knows where it will end.

Romney and his surrogates have accused Giuliani of enacting a policy as Mayor that effectively encouraged illegal immigrants to settle in New York and looked the other way once they were there. Indeed, as the Post article reports, "In his first year as mayor in 1994, [Giuliani] said of illegal immigrants: 'If you come here, and you work hard, and you happen to be in an undocumented status, you're one of the people who we want in this city.'" What's more, he was known, as I pointed out in my last post, as a champion of immigrants.

Giuliani deflects this by blasting the federal government for not taking tough enough measures to enforce the rule of law and to deport illegals. He also has suggested the Romney's adminstration did little to identify and get rid of illegals in Massachusetts when he was Governor.

It's sad, really, that Giuliani has so distanced himself from his most admirable posture as a pro-immigration (but not pro-illegal immigrant!) advocate. It's sad that he has not had the courage to stand up to the rising tide of antipathy for immigrants and immigration in the U.S. right now. He could play a valuable role as a teacher to those who don't understand the value of immigrants and immigration to America, and he could help draw a bright and careful line between illegal immigrants and legal immigrants, a line that I worry has gotten awful blurry in the minds of many Americans.

But he probably feels that his job is not to teach and not to go against the tide right now. He's running for President. He cannot afford to piss anyone off. He's got to fish where the most fish are. That's what the smart political consultants are obviously telling him, Romney and the other candidates, many of whom have been equally undistinguished when it comes to this issue.

And they've seen John McCain get hammered for his strong support of the ill-fated immigration reform bill in the Senate, They don't want to end up in the same ditch with him. From the point of view of running a campaign, which is just about getting elected, that's perfectly understandable, if unsettling.

But consider this: whom are Giuliani, Romney and the other political leaders who refuse to stand up to the anti-immigrant tide alienating? True, in the shorter run, immigrant voters -- the largest among them Latino -- probably aren't going to help either Giuliani, Romney or any Republican win their primary and perhaps not even the general election (though that's debatable). Most of them (and I'm talking about legal immigrants who are citizens, because only they can vote) aren't Republicans. Indeed, while they represent a growing and dynamic community, they are not voting in large numbers.

Right now.

But at some point, maybe not too far in the future, guys like Giuliani or Romney will want to turn to immigrant voters and their extended communities, and what can they expect from from these communities? Nada, baby. Once again, Republicans are mortgaging their future relationship with immigrant communities and other ethnic groups that have been based on immigration.

I would argue, too, that the rest of us, non-first generation immigrants, who rely heavily on the immigrant community in our daily lives, ought to see how this race to the bottom -- the effort by politicians to outdo one another on their anti-immigrant bone fides -- hurts our own self-interest. We should let them know how we feel in town hall meetings and at the ballot box.

Jeff

P.S. Click here for the trailer to "Broadway Danny Rose." And, while this has nothing to do with the subject above, I can't resist including some precious lines from the script:*Danny Rose: If you take my advice, you'll become one of the great balloon-folding acts of all time! Really, 'cause I don't just see you folding balloons in joints. You listen to me, you're gonna fold balloons at universities and colleges.*Tina Vitale: I like it when he takes the microphone off the stand and sort of throws the microphone from hand to hand.Danny Rose: That's my gesture. I gave him that.Tina Vitale: Years ago he took the microphone off the stand.Danny Rose: But he didn't throw it from hand to hand. I used to do that in nightclub acts.Tina Vitale: So you taught him to throw the microphone from hand to hand...Danny Rose: I taught him everything he knows. *Tina Vitale: They shot him in the eyes.Danny Rose: Oh my God, he's blind?Tina Vitale: He's dead...Danny Rose: Of course, the bullets would go right through...